Newspaper Page Text
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Big Items
ACROSS
I Big (tigers,
lions, stc.)
8 Big .
California
BBig
(London clock)
II Ability to act
12 Brazilian
wallaba
13 Marie
Saint
14 Papal garment
15 Basic color
16 Bulgarian coin
17 Pointed missile
weapon
18 Clergy
20 Part of a
garment
22 Daylight saving
time (ab.)
23 Food serving
slang)
29 Turkish title
32 Enough
(archaic)
34 Implore
35 Solemn pledges
37 “Emerald Isle”
39 Cyprinold fish 1
’ 40 Extemporize I
(coll.)
42 Require
44 Social beginner
(coll.) I
46 Dawdle |
50 Postponed
54 Evergreen tree
55 Raw metal
56 Beverage
57 Frugal
58 Prime number
59 Possessed i
60 Biblical king j
61 Soak hemp
62 Public notices •
63 Soviet lake j
DOWN
; 1 Himalayan
chamois
2 Cognizant 1
3 Dissolved
4 Before 1
5 Hindu garment
6 Set on end <
7 Salad ingredient;
8 Encircling strip
9 Always
10 Nation's sea <
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"Thank you for my doll, Aunt Sarah. For my next
birthday I want a wig, a miniskirt and karate lessons!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeve *' General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bin Kni « ht > Execute® Editor Editor
ran Locoed Wire Service UPL Fan NEa. Address aO mail (Subeeriptiene Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Olaae
Ohaago el Address term MW) to P. 0. Box U 5. K. Solomon BL, Griffin. Ga. Pootace Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Slagle Copy IS*
t 1
Answer to Previous Puzxls
38 New (comb,
form)
41 Big (large
cannon)
43 Big (group
of stars)
45 Staple food
47 Papal crown
48 Enlist
49 Bamboolike
grass
50 Entranceway
51 Sea eagle
52 Pedal
extremities
53 Diving bell
inventor
57 Aslan sheep
force
11 Seed containers
18 Middle (law)
19 Halt
21 Contend
24 Big:
(western river)
26 Swiss canton
27 Dejected
28 Hurricane
center
29 Hawaiian
pepper
30 Deity
31 Shoemaker's
tool
33 Exercise power
36 lateral part
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
MILWAUKEE, Wis. —Gov.
George Romney, speaking in
Wisconsin, criticizing the role
the South Vietnamese arc
playing in the Vietnam war:
“There must be away to
make certain they play more of
a part in this whole picture.”
WASHINGTON—Sen. Walter
F. Mondale, D-Minn., charging
that the U.S. auto industry is
making SIOO million extra in
profits this year by raising car
prices $25, attributing the hike
to “shoulder harnesses”:
"Our private investigators
following this increase indicated
that the cost of complying with
this standard is less than $5 per
car."
LOS ANGELES — Deposed
heavyweight boxing champion
Cassius Clay, telling a Califor
nia State College audience that
the black and white races
should be separated:
“We’re not going to try to
move you out of your neighbor
hoods. We’re free and we want
a land of our own.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Feb. 5, the
38th day of 1968 with 330 to
follow.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning star is Venus. • •
The evening stars are Mercu
ry. Mars, Saturn and Jupiter.
On this day in history:
In 1631 British clergyman
Roger Williams, founder of the
colony of Rhode Island, arrived
in Salem, Mass., seeking
religious freedom.
In 1904 Russia and Japan
broke off diplomatic relations in
a dispute over Korea and
Manchuria.
In 1945 the 3rd army broke
through Nazi Germany’s Sieg
fried line.
In 1965 an Airliner crashed in
Chile, killing 82 persons.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year 819.00, six months SIO.OO,
three months $5.00. One
month $1.75, one week 40
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rate are
same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
one year $16.00, six months
$9.00, three months $4.50, one
month $1.60. Delivered by
Special Auto: One Tear
$21.00 (tax included)
f
Chance For Action
Instead Os Talk
Most people who drive automobiles think they are
pretty good at it. But most of them probably have some
bad driving habits they don’t know about.
This was brought out when two men from the Georgia
Safety Council came here to talk about defensive driving.
Max E. Urlich, program director; and Ray Brokaw, exe
cutive vice president of the Georgia Safety Council, both
told how a defensive driving course they took to become
instructors pointed up some of their own driving faults
they didn’t know they had.
“I thought I was a pretty good driver until I took the
training. Then I learned that I had some pretty bad habits,”
one of the candidly admitted.
Griffin and Spalding County officials who saw the out
line of the defensive driving program were convinced of
its merit. The city agreed to purchase materials for the
instructors course, indicating they would back the project.
They urged civic clubs and other groups to look into the
program.
The local government leaders have indicated their will
ingness to take a lead in getting the program started here.
They are sort of waiting to hear from the people.
Let those who think well of the program let our leaders
know of their interest.
* Much has been written and said about traffic safety.
This is an opportunity to take it out of the idea stage
and put it into the action stage.
Better Auto
Than Golf Ball
If you have a choice between being hit by a golf ball
and being hit by an automobile, pick the automobile (all
other things being equal, if that’s possible).
A study of verdicts in personal injury suits by Jury Ver
dict Research, Inc., of Cleveland, Ohio, indicates that
juries apparently feel that anyone indulging in a sport does
so at his own risk.
They are more inclined to favor the defendant (the one
who caused the injury) in such cases, since less than half
the injured parties recover a money award.
Least favored are golfers and baseball players. Only
about one out of five of these win their suits. Water skiers,
swimmers, bowlers and horseback riders have a somewhat
better chance.
But in any kind of sport accident, the research group
found, awards are generally less than for a similar injury
suffered in a traffic accident.
Gangsterism In
Rural Georgia
ANDERSON (S. C.) DAILY MAIL
Illicit liquor, murder plots, hired assassins—all these
sound like a page from the Chicago gangster era back in
the 1920’5.
To associate these characters with a small, almost rural
Georgia community is little short of fantastic.
Most Anderson area people have, no doubt, passed
through the little town of Jefferson, population less than
2,500, and therefore too small for a listing in the World
Almanac.
Jefferson is like scores of other small towns and a casual
tourist would likely have forgotten the place completely
within a few days.
Yet five men are under indictment (several already
either convicted or with confessions in the hands of autho
rities) in connection with the bombing death of Sol. Gen.
Floyd Hoard there last August.
This same general area of Georgia has also been in the
news in recent years in connection with a highly efficient
car theft ring, and other organized crime.
The fact that some, if not most, of those associated with
the automobile theft ring are behind bars, and that the
originator of the murder plot is now facing possible execu
tion, seems to be rather good evidence that the jungles of
a great city may be a safer place for criminal activities
than the wide open spaces of a sparcely populated Georgia
farm county.
Cliuckliug
With Ye Editor V
Some people expect too much of themselves and some
don’t expect enough.
••• • •
‘‘Today’s typical citizen is the guy who wears last
year’s suit and drives this year’s car on next year’s salary.”
—Brooks, Alta. Bulletin
• •••<•
A guaranteed way to insure that someone reads some
thing: Mark it “Secret and Confidential!”
BERRTS MID
‘‘We have rights, too! I’m
getting fed up with all these
gibes at COMPLACENCY.”
MY
answerM
Parents Boss
Don’t you think that at 16 I'm
old enough to decide what I
want to do? I’m fed up with
being bossed by my parents.
W.M.
At sixteen you should be able
to make some decisions for
yourself, but not all of them. The
Bible says: "Hear the instruc
tions of thy father, and forsake
not the law of thy mother.” (Pro
bers 1:8). You and your parents
should sit down together and
calmly discuss this problem.
They should realize its time you
be given some independence, to
help you grow Into a self-reli
ant adult. Make a list of the sit
uations which usually are the
cause of conflict. Try to persu
ade your father and mother to
let you make your own decis
ions on a few of these Issues. If
they agree, prove by your ac
tions that they can trust your
judgment.
As long as your parents are
contributing to your support they
have a right to make certain ru
les, and to expect you to obey
them. It will be far easier to
come to an agreement if you
consult God as you discuss this
problem. You and your parents
must pray about this. With God’s
help you can come to a decis
ion which will restore peace
and happiness to your family.
One of the greatest causes of
teenage delinquency is disobe
dience to parents. God has pro
mised to honor those that obey
their parents.
fOS TOD AT HOM VU'J
Cbe Upper
I will go in the strength of the
Lord God. (Psalm 71:16)
PRAYER: Dear God, forgive
me that so often I have forgot
ten Thee and tried to do things
in my own strength. Teach me
to humble myself before Thee
that I may seek Thy help and
strength at all times. In Christ's
name I ask it. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day:
English writer George Payne
Rainsford James said, “Age is
the most terrible misfortune
that can happen to any man;
other evils mend, this is every
day getting worse.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
The Order of Patrons of
Husbandry, better known
as the Grange, was founded
after the Civil War to pro
mote the interests of farm
ers who felt victimized by
monopolistic railroad prac
tices, says The World Al
manac. Through lobbying,
the “Grange laws" ot the
1870 s were passed by the
states to curb discrimina
tory railroad practices; the
laws led to federal monop
oly control in the Interstate
Commerce Act and the
Sherman Antitrust Act.
. Copyright © IBM.
X>WRpiiper
Monday, Feb. 5, 1968 Griffin Daily News
-■I
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4